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The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis

Ten percent of the global population live in extreme poverty under $1.90 a day. To combat chronic multidimensional poverty, the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC)created the Graduation Approach, which consists of a Big Push effect implemented through a series of interventions including as...

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Main Author: Abdel Hamid, Noha
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Abdel Hamid, Noha
author_browse Abdel Hamid, Noha
author_facet Abdel Hamid, Noha
author_sort Abdel Hamid, Noha
collection Thesis
description Ten percent of the global population live in extreme poverty under $1.90 a day. To combat chronic multidimensional poverty, the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC)created the Graduation Approach, which consists of a Big Push effect implemented through a series of interventions including asset transfer, mentoring, saving groups and a series of service provisions, to push ultra-poor households to exit poverty sustainably. Implemented so far in over 50 countries, the model has shown positive results even after ten years of the first interventions. Sawiris Foundation for Social Development partnered with BRAC and the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Laboratory (J-PAL) to implement the program in Egypt, starting in 2018, called Bab Amal. I am looking at the model and focusing on the saving groups and their effectiveness and comparing them to the current Village Saving and Loan Associations (VSLA) methodology, implemented by multiple NGOs, and currently adopted by the Egyptian government to scale on a national level. The methodology is based on qualitative research informed by semi structured in depth interviews and focus group discussions with the participants of the program in Assiut and Sohag. The analysis shows that the graduation approach adopted in Bab Amal, including the saving groups component, has contributed to increasing savings, creating income generating activities, improving communication and decision-making abilities within the household and the group and empowering women socially and economically. The program also raised awareness on issues of hygiene, health, education, life skills, gender-based violence and drug addiction. The study also shows very limited borrowing activities which may risk the sustainability of the model in the growth phase of the enterprises. From a process analysis perspective, it is recommended to adopt the VSLA model instead of regular saving groups, as it operates from a bottom-up approach that creates improved abilities for borrowing, improved governance and ownership of the model, all essential for growth and sustainability. The nature of Bab Amal as a pilot and the randomized selection of households it adopted, could not allow the self-selection of the saving groups, which had smaller groups, inefficient for the borrowing activity that is essential for sustainability beyond the project life.
format Thesis
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:53.165Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3006 The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis Abdel Hamid, Noha Ten percent of the global population live in extreme poverty under $1.90 a day. To combat chronic multidimensional poverty, the Bangladesh Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC)created the Graduation Approach, which consists of a Big Push effect implemented through a series of interventions including asset transfer, mentoring, saving groups and a series of service provisions, to push ultra-poor households to exit poverty sustainably. Implemented so far in over 50 countries, the model has shown positive results even after ten years of the first interventions. Sawiris Foundation for Social Development partnered with BRAC and the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Laboratory (J-PAL) to implement the program in Egypt, starting in 2018, called Bab Amal. I am looking at the model and focusing on the saving groups and their effectiveness and comparing them to the current Village Saving and Loan Associations (VSLA) methodology, implemented by multiple NGOs, and currently adopted by the Egyptian government to scale on a national level. The methodology is based on qualitative research informed by semi structured in depth interviews and focus group discussions with the participants of the program in Assiut and Sohag. The analysis shows that the graduation approach adopted in Bab Amal, including the saving groups component, has contributed to increasing savings, creating income generating activities, improving communication and decision-making abilities within the household and the group and empowering women socially and economically. The program also raised awareness on issues of hygiene, health, education, life skills, gender-based violence and drug addiction. The study also shows very limited borrowing activities which may risk the sustainability of the model in the growth phase of the enterprises. From a process analysis perspective, it is recommended to adopt the VSLA model instead of regular saving groups, as it operates from a bottom-up approach that creates improved abilities for borrowing, improved governance and ownership of the model, all essential for growth and sustainability. The nature of Bab Amal as a pilot and the randomized selection of households it adopted, could not allow the self-selection of the saving groups, which had smaller groups, inefficient for the borrowing activity that is essential for sustainability beyond the project life. 2022-10-01T07:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1972 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3006/viewcontent/Thesis_Noha_Abdel_Hamid_The_Role_of_VSLA_in_Poverty_Graduations_Program_in_Egypt_FINAL_6.9.22.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Poverty Extreme Poverty Ultra Poor Saving Groups Village Savings and Loans VSLA Egypt Poverty Graduation Women Rural Human Development. Economic Policy Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration Public Policy
spellingShingle Poverty
Extreme Poverty
Ultra Poor
Saving Groups
Village Savings and Loans
VSLA
Egypt
Poverty Graduation
Women
Rural
Human Development.
Economic Policy
Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Public Policy
Abdel Hamid, Noha
The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis
title The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis
title_full The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis
title_fullStr The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis
title_short The Role of Village Savings and Loan Associations in Poverty Graduation Programs: A Process Analysis
title_sort role of village savings and loan associations in poverty graduation programs a process analysis
topic Poverty
Extreme Poverty
Ultra Poor
Saving Groups
Village Savings and Loans
VSLA
Egypt
Poverty Graduation
Women
Rural
Human Development.
Economic Policy
Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration
Public Policy
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/1972
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3006/viewcontent/Thesis_Noha_Abdel_Hamid_The_Role_of_VSLA_in_Poverty_Graduations_Program_in_Egypt_FINAL_6.9.22.pdf
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